A few things came across my screen about overdiagnosis of breast cancer from BMJ and Annals of IM Just a reminder that raising awareness isn’t enough. A ribbon doesn’t provide any information- that’s our job.

I’m starting to tweet Grand Rounds when I can. #uabmgr. Here’s what I learned in the great talk on The Gut Microbiome given by Martin Rodriguez and Casey Morrow

And finally, I feel the need to share a few articles making the rounds some of the frustration in clinical medicine these days: burnout in Washington Post, competing agendas in NYT (here on Danielle Ofri’s site) and irritation with EMRs in The Atlantic. I have mixed feelings about these things, I love my job and want all of you to become primary care physicians. But burnout is real, as are the administrative challenges of practice. We need to be able to talk about it, and I am relying on all of you to help make it better!

Like this:

Every year during baseball season, certain things just return to my consciousness.

Lucky you, this year I’ve turned this childhood favorite into a blog post! It’s time to talk about chronic diarrhea (I know you are excited). Much credit to Dr. Erin Contratto who prepared this topic for AMR last month, and from whom I’ve stolen a lot of this information. Here’s a case to get us started.

65 year old female who complains of 6 months of intermittent diarrhea. She has periods of up to 10-15 loose, watery stools a day, other times she has more like 2-3 stools. She frequently wakes up at night with crampy abdominal pain and diarrhea. She has tried to eliminate lactose and gluten for short periods during this time, but it didn’t really make a difference. She has not seen any blood, has not had fevers, has not lost any weight. She doesn’t have stools that are greasy or hard to flush. No one else at home has similar sx. She lives in the city, doesn’t camp, and hasn’t traveled in this time.

She has diabetes that is currently diet controlled with an HbA1c around 6.5%, hypertension, and GERD. She has not had medicine changes.

Step 1 is to classify the diarrhea as Fatty, Inflammatory, or Watery. Fatty diarrhea will be hard to flush, and patients may describe a greasy sheen on the water in the toilet. Malabsorption is the most common diagnosis in this category. Inflammatory diarrhea is characterized by blood, fever, and abdominal pain, and may get you thinking about infection, ischemia, or inflammatory bowel disease (the i’s have it?). Watery diarrhea is more common than either of the other types, and is just what it sounds like, voluminous watery stools- without blood or fat.

Step 2- Is the watery diarrhea osmotic or secretory? I try to reason these out based on the wording. Osmotic diarrhea refers to “something” in the colon that attracts/keeps water there- leading to more water in the stool/diarrhea. Polyethylene glycol is an osmotic laxative so would cause an osmotic diarrhea. The pathologic etiologies of osmotic diarrhea include factitious ingestion of these kinds of laxatives, as well as carbohydrate malabsorption. Osmotic diarrhea often occurs after meals (after the ingestion), and thus doesn’t wake patients up at night.

Secretory diarrhea on the other hand, refers to something secreted into the colon that then leads to the diarrhea. This can occur any and all times of the day, and often wakes patients up from sleep. Included in this category are: post-cholecystectomy syndrome (from bile salts), certain toxins, and, neuroendocrine tumors, and vasculitis. Also here is colitis, particularly microscopic colitis, disordered motility (IBS, hyperthyroidism), and cancer. Based on history, our patient has secretory diarrhea.

You could also calculate a stool osmotic gap to figure out secretory vs osmotic. The formula is 290 – 2 ({Na+} + {K+}), and a gap >125mOsms suggests osmotic diarrhea, while a gap <50mOsms suggests secretory.

Step 3: Once you figure out the big category, you can run down a differential diagnosis and decide what testing to order. Commonly done: hemoccult, stool WBC, c.diff toxin, serum and stool electrolytes, qualitative fecal fat, laxative testing. Certainly you wouldn’t do everything on every patient, but use your history and physical as a guide.

Step 4: What about endoscopy? Many patients with chronic diarrhea will end up getting either a colonoscopy or flex sig. Certainly if there is weight loss, fever, bleeding/iron deficiency, or unclear diagnosis, you would consider. Patients with typical IBS signs and no red flags may not require endoscopy. Flex sig may be fine for an initial test, but consider getting the full colonoscopy if you are concerned for Crohn’s disease (to look at terminal ileum), malignancy, or bleeding.

From here, you’ll treat the disorder that you uncover. And that is a post for another day…